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Packet Switching Vs Circuit Switching. Packet-switched and circuit-switched networks use two different technologies for sending messages and data from one point to another. Each have their advantages and disadvantages depending on what you are trying to do. . Packet Switching.
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Packet Switching Vs Circuit Switching Packet-switched and circuit-switched networks use two different technologies for sending messages and data from one point to another. Each have their advantages and disadvantages depending on what you are trying to do.
Packet Switching • In packet-based networks, the message gets broken into small data packets. These packets are sent out from the computer and they travel around the network seeking out the most efficient route to travel as circuits become available. This does not necessarily mean that they seek out the shortest route. • Each packet may go a different route from the others.
Packet Switching • Each packet is sent with a ‘header address’. This tells it where its final destination is, so it knows where to go. • The header address also describes the sequence for reassembly at the destination computer so that the packets are put back into the correct order. • One packet also contains details of how many packets should be arriving so that the recipient computer knows if one packet has failed to turn up. • If a packet fails to arrive, the recipient computer sends a message back to the computer which originally sent the data, asking for the missing packet to be resent.
Packet Switching Difference between circuit switching and packet switching: • Packet Switching • Message is broken up into segments (packets). • Each packet carries the identification of the intended recipient, data used to assist in data correction and the position of the packet in the sequence. • Each packet is treated individually by the switching centre and may be sent to the destination by a totally different route to all the others.
Packet Switching Packet Switching • Advantages: • Security • Bandwidth used to full potential • Devices of different speeds can communicate • Not affected by line failure (rediverts signal) • Availability – do not have to wait for a direct connection to become available • During a crisis or disaster, when the public telephone network might stop working, e-mails and texts can still be sent via packet switching
Packet Switching Disadvantages • Under heavy use there can be a delay • Data packets can get lost or become corrupted • Protocols are needed for a reliable transfer • Not so good for some types data streams e.g real-time video streams can lose frames due to the way packets arrive out of sequence.
Circuit Switching • Circuit switching was designed in 1878 in order to send telephone calls down a dedicated channel. This channel remained open and in use throughout the whole call and could not be used by any other data or phone calls.
Circuit Switching • There are three phases in circuit switching: • Establish • Transfer • Disconnect • The telephone message is sent in one go, it is not broken up. The message arrives in the same order that it was originally sent.
Circuit Switching • In modern circuit-switched networks, electronic signals pass through several switches before a connection is established. • During a call, no other network traffic can use those switches. • The resources remain dedicated to the circuit during the entire data transfer and the entire message follows the same path. • Circuit switching can be analogue or digital
Circuit Switching • With the expanded use of the Internet for voice and video, analysts predict a gradual shift away from circuit-switched networks. • A circuit-switched network is excellent for data that needs a constant link from end-to-end. For example real-time video.
Circuit Switching • Circuit Switching • Advantages: • Circuit is dedicated to the call – no interference, no sharing • Guaranteed the full bandwidth for the duration of the call • Guaranteed Quality of Service
Circuit Switching Disadvantages: • Inefficient – the equipment may be unused for a lot of the call, if no data is being sent, the dedicated line still remains open • Takes a relatively long time to set up the circuit • During a crisis or disaster, the network may become unstable or unavailable. • It was primarily developed for voice traffic rather than data traffic.
Packet Vs Circuit Switching It is easier to double the capacity of a packet switched network than a circuit network – a circuit network is heavily dependent on the number of channel available.
Packet Vs Circuit Switching • It is cheaper to expand a packet switching system. • Circuit-switched technologies, which take four times as long to double their performance/cost, force ISPs to buy that many more boxes to keep up. This is why everyone is looking for ways to get Internet traffic off the telephone network. The alternative of building up the telephone network to satisfy the demand growth is economically out of the question.
Packet Vs Circuit Switching • The battle between circuit and packet technologies has been around a long time, and it is starting to be like the old story of the tortoise and the hare. In this case, the hare is circuit switching—fast, reliable and smart. The hare starts out fast and keeps a steady pace, while the tortoise starts slow but manages to double his speed every 100 meters. • If the race is longer than 2 km, the power of compounding favours the tortoise.